The Classroom of the Late Romantic



in memory of Thom Gunn

You made it look too easy in the doing,
tempting the amateur and acolyte
to think that one could vie with style, pursuing
the oracle’s job, a rake’s calling, or might
step in tradition as lightly as you’d tread
in motorcycle boots the classroom boards,
infusing your blood into the sleeping dead
Makers exhumed from the sonorous hoards
of word-things, to read a grateful shade
back into life resounding on the tongue.
Our tongue—we barely spoke it, but got from you
the sense, the leather necromancer who made
his living casting spells: we were too young
to know that’s not a thing one hopes to do.

—Peter Spagnuolo

Peter Spagnuolo is a criminal sentencing specialist working in New York City on behalf of federal defendants; he also moonlights as an electrician. A new chapbook of his poems, Lark-Mirrors and Murder-Hogs, appears this winter as a letterpress edition artist’s book.